NIL
Todd Bowles Talks NIL Money Impact – JoeBucsFan.com
Todd Bowles speaks. So electric returner/receiver Tez Johnson, the Bucs’ seventh-round draft pick, isn’t getting much of a pay raise this season to play for Tampa Bay. He’ll pull in about $865,000. That’s in the ballpark of earnings for a stud receiver at the University of Oregon, which Johnson was. Yes, times have changed. That’s […]


Todd Bowles speaks.
So electric returner/receiver Tez Johnson, the Bucs’ seventh-round draft pick, isn’t getting much of a pay raise this season to play for Tampa Bay.
He’ll pull in about $865,000. That’s in the ballpark of earnings for a stud receiver at the University of Oregon, which Johnson was.
Yes, times have changed. That’s why fans aren’t treated to as many wildly emotional draft-night scenes. So many players already hit the lottery in college and have more of a professional mindset.
Asked about how life-changing earnings for college athletes, NIL money, has affected evaluation of college prospects this week on SiriusXM NFL Radio, Todd Bowles had a thoughtful answer.
“I don’t think it hurts when you’re evaluating a player. I think it hurts when you’re evaluating the person,” Bowles said.
“When you’re evaluating why they’re taking the money or how they’re taking the money or if they keep transferring from schools, you try to find out the ‘why’ in that category. The player is gonna be the player.
“I think we’re all still trying to figure how the NIL is working and how that affects everybody in the league. And everybody’s still scrambling in college as well as in the NFL. But the player itself, the tape and the practice habits will tell you a lot about the person.
“The character tells you a lot about the person. We try to pick high character guys and understand that some people need the money and may use it as a motivation. Some people play for the love of the game; some people play to take care of their families. It’s up to us, it’s up to the scouts. It’s up for everybody to decipher what kind of person we’re bringing in the building and we try to make sure we bring in the right person. Obviously, money talks in a lot of cases and these guys aren’t desperate to get the league money now that they can get the college money. I mean, they’re handing out like hotcakes over there.
“But there’s still a lot of guys where the NFL is the pinnacle and they work at it and they find their craft, and they want to be the best in the league. And those are the guys you try to take.”
The Bucs certainly seem to have found the right formula.
Ira Kaufman Recaps Day 3 Of The Draft, Grades The Bucs’ Haul, Talks Shilo Sanders, Deeper Meaning And Debates The Top-3 Most Critical Bucs, And More
NIL
Chat Wrap
foxr2001: Ok, on to some questions. 1, Who do you have as the second stringers for DE and DT (especially DT)? Aside from McDonald, we have a true 1-tech on the team? 2, Will either of the Armstrong brothers scratch the 2-deep this season? I believe when recruiting them one was recruiting as an OT […]


foxr2001: Ok, on to some questions.
1, Who do you have as the second stringers for DE and DT (especially DT)? Aside from McDonald, we have a true 1-tech on the team?
2, Will either of the Armstrong brothers scratch the 2-deep this season? I believe when recruiting them one was recruiting as an OT and the other as an OG. Does it still look like one will play tackle and the other guard or are they going to put them in wherever needed?
3, Presumably Peoples and Donaldson will split carries this season, roughly 50/50. I’d think Bo Jackson will be the #3 RB given his potential and assuming he doesn’t do anything foolish like fumbling the ball a lot. SWD will then be #4. Does Isaiah West redshirt? And do you see the order as Peoples/Donaldson, Jackson, SWD?
4, Which true freshman are you most excited to see this season? And if Sanchez, pick your second most.
Thanks Steve!
Helwagen: 1, Backup defensive ends seem to be Logan George and probably the new UNC transfer Beau Atkinson and then maybe C.J. Hicks as well.
Backup defensive tackles probably Tywone Malone, Eric Mensah, Will Smith Jr. and maybe Jarquez Carter, too. No idea who projects as 1 or 3 techs. Lot of experimentation in the spring.
2, I think there is hope for the Armstrong Bros to get on the field this year. They are still just redshirt freshmen and most OL don’t get in there till the second or third year. Let’s see how it all checks out in preseason camp. They are not among the top 8 OL overall right now.
3, I think you have a good handle on the RB situation. They managed it so well last year and always seemed to have the right guy out there at the right time. Peoples will be the Hendo and Donaldson will be the Judkins. But Bo Jackson needs to play, too. He looks like a stud. West was hurt in the spring, so I dunno.
4, Oh, a lot of them. Bo Jackson at RB, Quincy Porter at WR, Carter Lowe at OT, Jarquez Carter at DT, Riley Pettijohn at LB. Those are the big ones.
ButlerBuck: What year(s) do you remember being the year when college athletics went from trading an education for athletic services changed to who can get the most money for their school/conference? IMO the schools broke the contract before the players did. They have really devalued an education by focusing on the $$$.
Helwagen: Oh man, probably 15 years ago with that round of conference realignment that started to screw everything up and tore up great rivalries. That’s when the money started to really become insane and coaching contracts quickly went past $5 million to $8-10 million. Once that happened, they presidents and ADs had no leg to stand on. They needed to start sharing it with the athletes … and now they are. Toothpaste is out of the tube. We ain’t going back.
NIL
Top Sun Belt College Football Transfer Portal Additions In 2025
Among all of the Group of Five conferences, I would argue the Sun Belt is the league that brought in the least amount of talent via the transfer portal so far. The conference also saw a ton of talent move on with some transferring to other G5 programs while others went to Power Four schools. […]

Among all of the Group of Five conferences, I would argue the Sun Belt is the league that brought in the least amount of talent via the transfer portal so far. The conference also saw a ton of talent move on with some transferring to other G5 programs while others went to Power Four schools.
Regardless, there are still some players who transferred into the Sun Belt who will make a name for themselves early on, along with a few guys who stayed within the conference.
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LB Luke Murphy, Coastal Carolina
There is an overhaul within the Chanticleers defense after they lost most of their starters to both the transfer portal and graduation. That means there are spots to be earned, and Murphy should claim one of the starting linebacker jobs. The Eastern Michigan transfer was second on the Eagles last season with 94 total tackles and added an interception.
DL Xavier Holmes, James Madison
Holmes was tabbed second-team All-Coastal Athletic Association last year following his standout season with Maine. He finished with 72 total tackles, 12.5 tackles for loss, six sacks, two forced fumbles, two fumble recoveries, and one interception. He started each game the past two seasons and will be an immediate disruptor for the Dukes.
QB Walker Howard, Louisiana
After spending three seasons in the SEC, Walker decided to go back home to Lafayette, where he’ll have the opportunity to lead the Ragin’ Cajuns offense and potentially live up to his pre-college hype where he was ranked among the top QBs in the country prior to committing to LSU. He spent his freshman campaign with the Tigers before spending the last two seasons with Ole Miss. He never played meaningful snaps, but his dual-threat ability should help make Louisiana a conference title contender once again.
DB Lucas Struck, Old Dominion
This junior college product was part of an Iowa Western team that lost in the NJCAA Division I national title game last season and was one of the biggest contributors on its defense. It will be a big step up in competition for Struck, but I think the redshirt sophomore will play a key role in this Monarchs defense. He finished last season with 62 total tackles and five pass breakups.
DB Jayvon Henderson, South Alabama
The Jaguars didn’t bring in a ton of players through the portal, but defensive back was a position of need. Henderson has experience playing both cornerback and safety. He was named to the Phil Steele All-Freshman team following his 2023 campaign where he started at corner for ETSU but transitioned to safety last season.
QB Braylon Braxton, Southern Miss
Braxton may be the biggest transfer addition in the league, which is unfortunate for Marshall that he transferred within conference. The redshirt senior was part of the mass exodus that left when head coach Charles Huff took the job at USM. Braxton was 8-0 as a starter last season and passed for 1,624 yards and 19 touchdowns while rushing for 610 yards and four scores.
CB Josh Moten, Southern Miss
Like Braxton, Moten transferred from Marshall and should be one of the top defensive backs in the league this season. He was an All-Sun Belt honorable mention as a junior last season and finished with five interceptions, five pass breakups, and 38 total tackles.

EDGE Kenard Snyder, Texas State
Snyder returns to the Sun Belt following his one-year stint at Iowa State. There, he played in 10 games where he had eight tackles and two sacks. He played for ULM from 2021-23 and had back-to-back seasons where he posted 60 tackles and double-digit tackles for loss. He earned all-conference honors in 2023 and should return as another solid defender in the league.
CB Kaleno Levine, Troy
There is an opportunity here for Levine to earn a starting cornerback spot and help a defense that struggled against the pass last season and snagged just six interceptions. The Trojans are returning some starters on defense, including two safeties, so if Levine can fill a void, the Troy defense can improve. The senior had a breakout season for Missouri State last year where he tallied 50 tackles and six pass breakups.
RB Zach Palmer-Smith, ULM
The Warhawks lost a standout running back to the portal in Ahmad Hardy, but Palmer-Smith can be a solid replacement. Palmer-Smith finished sixth in the FCS with 1,392 rushing yards last season and added 13 rushing TDs. The Richmond transfer was named second-team All-CAA and rushed for 100-plus yards in six games.

NIL
6 players would could swing Michigan football’s season in 2025
Excitement is building in Ann Arbor as the 2025 Michigan football season inches closer. Expectations are sky-high thanks in large part to five-star quarterback Bryce Underwood, but as exciting as Underwood’s arrival is, the Wolverines’ success this year will depend on more than just its new quarterback. There are plenty of unknowns on this roster […]

Excitement is building in Ann Arbor as the 2025 Michigan football season inches closer. Expectations are sky-high thanks in large part to five-star quarterback Bryce Underwood, but as exciting as Underwood’s arrival is, the Wolverines’ success this year will depend on more than just its new quarterback.
There are plenty of unknowns on this roster — transfers, returning players with something to prove and position battles still being decided. If this team is going to make another serious run at a Big Ten title and a return to the College Football Playoff, the Wolverines need more than a few key guys to step up in a big way.
Here are six players who could swing the entire season.
Marlin Klein
Michigan’s offense is undergoing a bit of a transformation, and one of the key questions is: Who replaces the production of Colston Loveland?
Enter Marlin Klein — the 6-foot-6 senior has been a part of Michigan’s offensive rotation since 2023 and now becomes the leader of a deep but unproven position group.
Physically, Klein has everything you want in a TE1 — size, speed, and experience (418 snaps last year). What he doesn’t have yet is consistent production, just 13 catches for 108 yards in 2024. But if he can take a leap like Luke Schoonmaker did in 2022, he could become a major weapon for the Wolverines in the passing game and a safety net in high-pressure moments.
With Michigan desperate for reliable pass-catchers, Klein’s emergence as a legitimate No. 1 option at the position would be a massive boost.
Jyaire Hill
The secondary is one of Michigan’s biggest strengths on paper, but the on-field performance of that unit will strongly hinge on the continued development of cornerback Jyaire Hill.
Hill flashed his high-end potential late in 2024, allowing just seven receptions for 68 yards over his final six games. He has the speed (10.7 100m) and size (6-foot-2) to be a lockdown corner, and he’s already being talked about as a potential 2026 first-round pick.
The question isn’t whether Hill is talented, it’s whether his consistency and maturity can match. He’ll likely be paired with Zeke Berry on the outside, and both must take another step forward with Will Johnson now in the NFL.
If Hill becomes a true No. 1 corner, Michigan’s defense could again be among the best in the nation.
Donaven McCulley
Michigan’s offense has lacked a go-to wide receiver since the departure of Roman Wilson two years ago. In 2025, the Wolverines can’t afford to have the same issue. That’s where Donaven McCulley comes in.
The 6-foot-5 transfer from Indiana had 48 receptions for 644 yards and six touchdowns in 2023. He was the guy for the Hoosiers, and now Michigan hopes he can be the same in Ann Arbor.
There’s a clear opening for a WR1, and McCulley is the most proven candidate. His ability to separate, make contested catches and stretch the field will be critical in taking pressure off the run game and unlocking the vertical passing game. If he lives up to his potential, he could be the X-factor that pushes Michigan’s offense to the next gear.
Tré Williams
On paper, Michigan’s defensive line is loaded with depth. But replacing Mason Graham and Kenneth Grant — two of the program’s most dominant interior linemen in recent memory — is no small task.
Tré Williams may be the guy to help ease that transition. The former Clemson Tiger has all of the measurables needed (6-foot-3, 315 pounds) to make an immediate impact and flashed some of that potential in 2024 with two sacks. If he can build on that momentum, Williams could help the Wolverines maintain their defensive dominance.
While Trey Pierce, Enow Etta and Ike Iwunnah will rotate in — along with fellow transfer Damon Payne Jr. — Williams has the experience and physical profile to be a true difference-maker. If he emerges as a disruptive force inside, the Wolverines might not miss a beat up front.
Zeke Berry
Jyaire Hill might be getting more offseason buzz, but Zeke Berry is every bit as important to Michigan’s 2025 secondary. After switching between roles in 2024, he’ll once again be projected to start full-time on the outside this year.
Berry and Hill need to become a cohesive, high-performing duo if Michigan hopes to go toe-to-toe offensively against teams like Oregon, Washington, and Ohio State, all of which bring serious firepower at wide receiver.
Obvious Mention: Bryce Underwood
Of course, we’d be remiss to not mention Bryce Underwood. The five-star freshman quarterback is already the face of the program before taking a single snap. His size, arm talent and athleticism are elite, and he’s fully embraced the pressure that comes with being a quarterback at Michigan.
If Underwood is as good as advertised, Michigan is a College Football Playoff team. But even if he’s just solid, the Wolverines should win 9-10 games behind their defense and run game. Still, his ceiling is the program’s ceiling. If he reaches it early, Ann Arbor could be rocking come December.
NIL
The 2025-26 Virginia Tech men’s basketball roster is rounding into form: How does it look?
As is the case every year, as we advance, changes abound in college basketball, with the transfer portal and NIL being as significant as they are. For the second straight year, Virginia Tech men’s coach Mike Young saw another offseason of roster turnover, but after the mass exodus last year, this year’s portal has been […]

As is the case every year, as we advance, changes abound in college basketball, with the transfer portal and NIL being as significant as they are. For the second straight year, Virginia Tech men’s coach Mike Young saw another offseason of roster turnover, but after the mass exodus last year, this year’s portal has been different.
The Hokies landed some key players out of the portal and even got some huge retention from some key players, with Tobi Lawal returning from the NBA Draft being the biggest retention. The 2025-26 season is a big one for Virginia Tech, which is looking to rebound from a dreadful 13-19 season and a first-round elimination in the ACC Tournament. With that said, let’s take a look at how the Hokies roster is shaping up as we enter June.
Virginia Tech 2025-26 men’s basketball roster breakdown
Back Court
Ben Hammond
Izaiah Pasha
Brett Freeman
Jailen Bedford
Jaden Schutt
The good news here is that Ben Hammond is returning after coming on over the second half of the season and in ACC play. He saw the floor well, came up with big plays defensively shot well when he was given the opportunity. Jaden Schutt, having a year under his belt after coming over from Duke and playing a whole season, should help.
What should we think about the guards and wings? Izaiah Pasha should be an upgrade over Brandon Rechsteiner, who left for Colorado State in the transfer portal and freshman Brett Freeman will have a chance to develop behind Hammond and Schutt.
Front Court
Tyler Johnson
Sin’Cere Jones
Tobi Lawal
Amani Hansberry
Antonio Dorn
Solomon Davis
Christian Gurdak
As for the front court, there is a lot of inexperience in the middle with Mylyjael Poteat leaving and Patrick Wessler leaving in the portal. Antonio Dorn could be a very underrated addition for Young, and there is a lot of interest surrounding incoming freshman Christian Gurdak, a four-star recruit.
I think Virginia Tech should be ok in the backcourt, and the real question is how quickly their frontcourt players, mainly in the middle, can come together and jell? That will be big by the time ACC play comes around in late December, as those will be a gauntlet of 18 games. There are still some roster spots open that Young can fill over the summer, but just by the looks of things now, this certainly has the chance to be a team that wins more games next season than they did in 2024-25, which isn’t saying a lot. There is reason for hope.
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Nijaree Canady’s $1 Million Arm Slays Softball Favorite Oklahoma
Nijaree Canady’s $1 Million Arm Slays Softball Favorite Oklahoma Privacy Manager Link 2

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Jeremiah Smith, Ryan Williams Get Nod As College Football 26 Cover Athletes
Last Updated on June 2, 2025 College Football fans rejoice! EA Sports has revealed the cover athletes for EA Sports College Football 26. Ohio State wide receiver Jeremiah Smith and Alabama wide receiver Ryan Williams will be the two players gracing the cover of College Football 26. Further, the deluxe edition will feature legendary college […]

Last Updated on June 2, 2025
College Football fans rejoice! EA Sports has revealed the cover athletes for EA Sports College Football 26. Ohio State wide receiver Jeremiah Smith and Alabama wide receiver Ryan Williams will be the two players gracing the cover of College Football 26. Further, the deluxe edition will feature legendary college football players, notable coaches, and beloved mascots that reflect the pageantry of the sport. The deluxe edition will also feature some of the sport’s successful coaches, including Ohio State head coach Ryan Day, Notre Dame head coach Marcus Freeman, and Georgia head coach Kirby Smart.
Other college football players featured on the cover of the deluxe edition are Clemson QB Cade Klubnik, Notre Dame RB Jeremiyah Love, and Penn State RB Nick Singleton. EA Sports College Football 26 releases on July 10 for PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X|S.


Given the success of EA Sports College Football 25, which became the highest-selling sports game in U.S. history, the anticipation for the sophomore installment of the game is very high. The cover featuring two of college football’s burgeoning young stars personifies taking fans’ experience of the game to another level.
“Last year, when we brought back the pride, pageantry, atmosphere, and traditions of College Football, the response from fans was overwhelming,” said Evan Dexter, VP of Franchise Strategy & Marketing, EA SPORTS College Football. “With College Football 26, we’re celebrating our sophomore season with two generational sophomore wide receivers on the cover, and we can’t wait for the world to experience even more heart and authenticity across athletes, stadiums, coaches, and fans.”
Both Williams and Smith put their imprint on college football last season with impressive freshman campaigns. Williams, known for his speed, elusiveness, and spectacular catch ability, shared his excitement about being a cover athlete.
“As a lifelong fan of EA SPORTS games, being on the cover of College Football 26 is a dream come true,” said Williams. “It was incredible to see myself in College Football 25 last year, and now to represent Alabama and share this moment with fans who’ve played EA SPORTS games for years is unreal.”
Entering his freshman season at Ohio State, Jeremiah Smith was surrounded by a lot of hype. However, he proved he was college football’s best offensive weapon, leading Ohio State to a National Championship. Smith is widely known for his physical route running and limitless catching radius. He expressed tremendous gratitude for having the opportunity to be on the cover of EA Sports College Football 26.
“Being on the cover of EA SPORTS College Football 26 is a tremendous privilege, and I’m proud to represent Ohio State alongside Coach Day while carrying the Buckeye legacy forward, celebrating the passion of our fans and the tradition of this incredible program,” he said.
College Football fans can pre-order the EA SPORTS MVP Bundle now, which includes both the Deluxe Editions of EA SPORTS College Football 26 and Madden NFL 26. The bundle includes 3-day early access to both games plus special bonuses. The Standard and Deluxe Editions of College Football 26 are also available for pre-order.
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